http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/19/world/asia/19iht-eductahir19.html?_r=1&ref=asia#
Indonesian Acts in 'Giving Back to Society'
By LIZ GOOCH
Published: March 18, 2012 
SINGAPORE — “You have to give people the bait, not the fish,” said Tahir, the 
founder of a vast Indonesia-based business empire. “The fish, you can finish it 
in a week. But you give them the bait — the talent, the education — they can 
use this for their whole life.” 


It is this philosophy that has guided the philanthropic endeavors of Mr. Tahir, 
who goes by one name, and whom Forbes named the 15th-richest Indonesian last 
year. His beneficiaries include universities in Indonesia, Singapore, China and 
the United States. 
Mr. Tahir, founder of the Mayapada Group, whose interests include banking, 
property, hospitals and media, has poured millions of dollars into 
universities, often in funding for needy students and most recently medical 
research. 

While there is a growing culture of giving to higher education institutions in 
Asia, Mr. Tahir takes a more hands-on approach than many other donors. 

Mr. Tahir, who came from a humble background, is now seeking to impart what he 
has learned on his way to becoming a tycoon whose net worth Forbes estimates at 
$1.4 billion. He is also the first Southeast Asian to sit on the board of 
trustees of the University of California, Berkeley. 

Mr. Tahir, born in the Indonesian city of Surabaya in 1952, says his family 
struggled financially during his early years, when his parents ran a pedicab 
business, leasing the three-wheel vehicles out to drivers. 

By the time Mr. Tahir had finished high school, his family could afford to send 
him to university, although his academic career would feature a few false 
starts. First, he tried civil engineering at a university in Surabaya but only 
lasted a semester. Then he went to Taiwan, where he had been accepted into 
medical school, but he only stayed a month before his father fell ill and he 
returned home. 

At the age of 20, Mr. Tahir found his calling at the business school at Nanyang 
University in Singapore. Every month he would return to Surabaya with products 
from Singapore department stores — women’s clothing, children’s bicycles — and 
capitalize on Indonesians’ desire for imported goods to help fund his 
schooling. 

He returned to the classroom at 35, completing a master’s degree in finance 
through an overseas program offered by Golden Gate University at Singapore 
Management University. Mr. Tahir said his belief in the importance of education 
had only grown over the years. 

“The strength of a family, or the country or an organization or business entity 
does not just purely depend on the current management but more it depends on 
how you prepare the future generations to take over,” he said in an interview 
in Singapore. 

Mr. Tahir, who serves as the deputy chairman on the board of trustees at 
Pancasila University in Jakarta, has donated about 30 billion rupiah, or $3.27 
million, to 10 state universities in Indonesia, mostly in the form of 
scholarships for needy students. 

He is planning to donate 10,000 laptops to underprivileged Indonesian high 
school students who rank in the top 5 percent academically, at a cost he 
estimates at $3 million. 

“We see around us so many needy students,” he said. “They lost the opportunity 
to go to school. I think that inspired me. We have to pay more attention to 
education.” 

Mr. Tahir said he “owed” Indonesia because the country had given him the 
“chance to make a living, to feed my children and now I have a little bit of 
achievement.” 

“So taking from society, giving back to society — I think this is a very core 
principle of the Eastern values,” he said. 

Mr. Tahir’s largest donation to date has been to the National University of 
Singapore. He donated 30 million Singapore dollars, or about $24 million, this 
year for medical research. Mr. Tahir, a Singapore permanent resident, said he 
had an “emotional relationship” with the university because it was akin to his 
alma mater and because his son is an alumnus. (Nanyang University merged with 
the University of Singapore to form the National University of Singapore.) 

“The Singapore education system is good, so a lot of Indonesians come to study 
in Singapore from primary school up to university level,” he said. 

Related
  a.. Asian Colleges Gaining Respect, Report Finds (March 19, 2012)

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